For fourteen Septembers I found myself excited to be in the beautiful Upper Peninsula of Michigan. There is the most beautiful fall foliage I have had the privilege to encounter. Over all of those years my sense of the beautiful has been expanded immeasurably by all of the tiny, out-of-the-way pockets of amazement that I have discovered in my travels; for instance this small wetland just off the edge of US 41 south of Baraga. For me, its complexity spoke a simplicity highlighted by the reflections in the still water and the early morning light playing through the grasses. I think I heard Eliot Porter speaking as well. A focal length of 180mm, the long end of short telephoto, allowed me to exclude unwanted information; compress the elements; and emphasize the relationships among the water, grass, and stumps. An aperture of f/22 allowed for depth-of-field; and a shutter speed of 0.6 seconds at ISO 100 gave me an overall medium exposure.